Juventas Cubesat for the Hera mision
- 1Royal Observatory of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium (ozgur.karatekin@oma.be)
- 2GomSpace Luxembourg
- 3IPAG, University of Grenoble - Alpes, France
- 4Università Di Bologna, Italy
- 5GMV, Madrid, Spain
The Juventas CubeSat, will be delivered to the Didymos binary asteroid system by ESA's Hera mission within the context of the Asteroid Impact and Deflection Assessment (AIDA) international collaboration. AIDA is a technology demonstration of the kinetic impactor concept to deflect a small asteroid and to characterize its physical properties. Due to launch in 2024, Hera would travel to the binary asteroid system Didymos. It will explore the binary asteroid and the crater formed by the kinetic impact the NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART). HERA will carry two 6U CubeSats, one of which is the Juventas CubeSat developed by GomSpace Luxembourg with the Royal Observatory of Belgium as principal investigator. The spacecraft will attempt to characterize the internal structure of Didymos’ secondary body, Dimorphos, over a period of roughly 2 months using a low-frequency radar, JuRa. During this period, Juventas will also perform radio science measurements using its Inter-Satellite-Link to characterize the mass and mass distribution of Dimorphos. Afterwards, Juventas will attempt to land on Dimorphos, during which the spacecraft is expected to perform several bounces. Once landed, Juventas will use its gravimeter GRASS to obtain measurements of the surface acceleration on Dimorphos for a nominal duration of two orbits. Through the monitoring of dynamics for landing and bouncing impacts as well as measurements from the GRASS gravimeter payload while on the surface, Juventas will determine surface mechanical properties and provide further information on subsurface structure and dynamical properties of Dimorphos.
How to cite: Karatekin, Ö., Le Bras, E., Van wal, S., Herique, A., Tortora, P., Ritter, B., Scoubeau, M., and Manuel Moreno, V.: Juventas Cubesat for the Hera mision, European Planetary Science Congress 2021, online, 13–24 Sep 2021, EPSC2021-750, https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2021-750, 2021.